The Answer Is Transaction Costs

Michael Munger

"The real price of everything is the toil and trouble of acquiring it."  -Adam Smith (WoN, Bk I, Chapter 5) In which the Knower of Important Things shows how transaction costs explain literally everything. Plus TWEJ,  and answers to letters.If YOU have questions, submit them to our email at taitc.email@gmail.com There are two kinds of episodes here: 1. For the most part, episodes June-August are weekly, short (20 mins), and address a few topics. 2. Episodes September-May are longer (1 hour), and monthly, with an interview with a guest.Finally, a quick note:  This podcast is NOT for Stacy Hockett. He wanted you to know that.....

  1. vor 2 Std.

    Transaction Costs Killed the Medical Stars

    Send us Fan Mail We try to make sense of a real problem many of us feel: paying a lot for U.S. healthcare while still waiting months to see a doctor. We trace how engineered transaction costs, from the Flexner Report to modern residency caps, restrict physician supply and protect price power while leaving clinicians overworked and patients stuck.  • getting “fired” by a health system and what it reveals about access  • why shortages don’t clear when prices rise, and how transaction costs block entry  • the Flexner Report as quality reform and supply restriction  • evidence of conflicts of interest and rushed methods behind the Flexner narrative  • Ruben Kessel’s puzzle on persistent price discrimination in medicine  • hospital privileges and county medical societies as cartel discipline  • why advertising bans and professional norms can function as anti-competition tools  • how residency caps and accreditation keep the bottleneck in place today  • a listener letter on data center payments as compensation versus bribes  • book of the week recommendation and a few parting thoughts  Links: The infamous Flexner Report:  http://archive.carnegiefoundation.org/publications/pdfs/elibrary/Carnegie_Flexner_Report.pdfHiatt and Stockton on the Flexner Report:  "The Impact of the Flexner Report on the Fate of Medical Schools in North America After 1909"Hiatt: "Around the Continent in 180 Days." Hiatt: "The Amazing Logistics of Flexner's Fieldwork."Kessell, Journal of Law and Economics, 1958:  "Price Discrimination in Medicine." Ernest Jones, "The God complex" in Essays in Applied Psycho-Analysis. Earliest source I could find for the TWEJ:  https://www.netfunny.com/rhf/jokes/old89/godplay.840.html PA data center story: https://www.thecentersquare.com/pennsylvania/article_3b615fd8-5d36-45c4-bfb6-4a3162104f0b.html Book-o-da-week:  Daniel Hannan, Inventing Freedom, Broadside Press. https://www.amazon.com/Inventing-Freedom-English-Speaking-Peoples-Modern/dp/006223174X/ If you have questions or comments, or want to suggest a future topic, email the show at taitc.email@gmail.com ! You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz

    48 Min.
  2. 23. Juni

    Parasites And Property Rights

    Send us Fan Mail BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE:  The information in this episode comes from Red Flags Press.  Their main web site is very useful for research purposes, and I recommend it! We follow the idea of the “social parasite” through socialist writing and show how it shifts from moral accusation to an enforceable legal category once society claims ownership over individual labor. We argue that the transaction costs of monitoring effort and assigning “socially useful” work push real-world socialism toward surveillance, coercion, and punishment. • socialist critique of wage labor as work or starve • transaction costs as defining, monitoring, and enforcing property rights • the property rights switch from self-ownership to society owning labor • “from each according to their ability” as an obligation backed by force • socialist writers labeling middlemen and many professions as parasites • the party as the decision-maker when prices are suppressed • Joseph Brodsky’s trial as a real anti-parasite enforcement example • why the parasite problem expands and becomes politically arbitrary • how similar labor-claim logic shows up in authoritarian socialism and fascism • why Scandinavian social democracy is capitalism, not classical socialism The book of the week is Lenin’s What Is to Be Done? Burning Questions of Our Moment, and I strongly recommend it. Links: Red Flags, "Why Socialism Says Slacking is Theft." Moments in Soviet History: The Trial of Joseph Brodsky Leo Huberman, The ABCs of Socialism. "Soviet Era 'Parasites'" https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2016/05/20/soviet-era-parasites-return-to-todays-russian-a52934 If you have questions or comments, or want to suggest a future topic, email the show at taitc.email@gmail.com ! You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz

    50 Min.
  3. 9. Juni

    Hereditary Monarchy: At Least You Know Which Idiot Is Next

    Send us Fan Mail Hereditary monarchy seems like a ridiculous way to pick a leader, yet it dominates most of human political history. We argue the reason is transaction costs: succession systems survive when they settle “who rules next” cheaply enough to prevent recurring civil war.  • Why hereditary monarchy is historically prevalent compared with democracy and universal suffrage  • Why “divine right” stories often rationalize a choice people already find tolerable  • Thomas Paine’s critique of hereditary succession and what it misses  • Hobbes on the state of nature as what happens when sovereignty is contested  • Succession as the master coordination problem of political order  • Transaction costs applied to elections, enforcement, legitimacy, and rent seeking  • Why elective monarchy can become an armed auction for total power  • Bright line rules versus discretionary selection and why speed can beat “better”  • How constitutional design lowers the cost of leadership transition when it works  • The legitimacy problem and why dynasties converge on endogamy  • The genetic consequences of endogamy and the Habsburg cautionary tale  • Twedges, book recommendation, and a listener letter on board game “math trades”  LINKS: Thomas Paine, Common Sense, February 1776 Michael Munger, The Ugly Pig, 20224 A.P. Martinich, Thomas Hobbes:  A Biography, 1999. Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, 1651. Neal Schultz, Suicide Kings: Hereditary Monarchy, 2025 Tbadel Barter App Cosmos Institute, Coasian Bargaining at Scale, 2025 UPDATE: An interesting, and more clearly articulated, application of the reasoning here.... https://aminga.substack.com/p/how-transaction-cost-economics-explains If you have questions or comments, or want to suggest a future topic, email the show at taitc.email@gmail.com ! You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz

    31 Min.
  4. 31. Mai

    Swollen Permits? Call Chile!

    Send us Fan Mail Permits feel like “just paperwork”, until they quietly become the biggest barrier to building, investing, and even basic economic growth. We use Chile’s fight with “permisologia” to show how bureaucracy creates delay, uncertainty, and political risk even when the stated goal is safety or environmental protection.  • permits as transaction costs that quietly tax projects and entrepreneurship  • why bureaucracy is not the same thing as government and why it crowds out market coordination  • “permisologia” in Chile and how a one-stop shop becomes many counters  • parallels to India’s license raj and the logic of rent seeking choke points  • Dominga as a case study in shifting rules, scandal, and investment held hostage  • documented GDP and jobs costs from permitting delay and collapsed processing capacity  • Chile’s LMAS reform plan including deadlines, digitization, and sworn declarations with sanctions  • Parkinson’s Law, bike shedding, and why committees obsess over trivial items  • listener letter on commune life and how transaction costs show up inside “one big firm”  Links: What is  "Permisología"? https://comentarista.emol.com/2294117/27242033/Emol-Social-Facts.html Framework Law (LMAS):  https://www.bluefieldresearch.com/research/chile-takes-another-step-towards-mining-reform/ Parkinson's Law and the "Law of Triviality":  https://fs.blog/parkinsons-law/ Twin Oaks Community:  https://www.twinoaks.org/ If you have questions or comments, or want to suggest a future topic, email the show at taitc.email@gmail.com ! You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz

    45 Min.
  5. 28. Apr.

    Honor Among Thieves: Anja Shortland and Ransomware

    Send us Fan Mail A talk with Dr Anya Shortland about the economics of ransomware and the gray-zone institutions that let extortion markets function when nobody can truly enforce trust. We dig into how cyber insurance quietly becomes a form of governance, why data leaks change the game, and what national security risks emerge as everything gets connected.  • criminal markets that sit between legal firms and underworld gangs  • insurance as governance through protocols, repeat play, and incident response packages  • why victims amplify risk when they throw money at crises  • the origin story of early ransomware and the transaction costs that made it fail  • step-by-step ransomware mechanics from phishing to exfiltration to encryption  • how gangs price ransoms by reading cash flow and insurance certificates  • leak sites, privacy regulation, and third-party liability as bargaining leverage  • why cyber insurance is fragmented and slow to enforce security standards  • deductibles, coverage caps, and market hardening that push better cybersecurity  • AI-enabled phishing and the asymmetric arms race between attackers and defenders  • state-linked ransomware, impunity jurisdictions, and critical infrastructure threats  • efficiency versus resilience in smart cities and the Internet of Things  Anja Shortland at Kings College London Shortland's book, Dark Screens:  https://www.amazon.com/Dark-Screens-Hackers-Shadowy-Ransomware/dp/1541705750Shortland's first TAITC episode: "Deals with shadows" Links mentioned in podcast: Alex Danco's pirate puzzle Pete Leeson's book, The Invisible Hook David Deutsch's book, The Beginning of Infinity If you have questions or comments, or want to suggest a future topic, email the show at taitc.email@gmail.com ! You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz

    1 Std. 7 Min.
  6. 24. März

    Are Transaction Costs Really Just Human Distance

    Send us Fan Mail We connect Adam Smith’s moral psychology to the modern idea of transaction costs and argue that the biggest frictions in markets start with the cost of understanding other people. We show how sympathy, propriety, self command, and reputation turn separate perspectives into workable cooperation and why justice is the real precondition for a stable commercial order.  • why transaction costs always exist and why institutions matter when exchange is costly  • a brief history of the term from Coase to an early use in Scitovsky  • transaction costs as asymmetric information and the cost of social coordination  • Smith’s epistemic distance and why sympathy requires imaginative effort  • propriety as social calibration through the impartial spectator  • self command as the price of being socially intelligible  • commerce as a practical school for restraint, trust, and predictability  • the prudent man as a model of conduct that reduces suspicion and monitoring  • Buchanan’s moral community, moral order, and moral anarchy as lenses on social stability  • why society can survive without beneficence but not without justice  • a listener’s college admissions case where interviews act as a separating equilibrium and improve aid allocation  Links: Liberty Fund eBook--Theory of Moral Sentiments (PAGES DO NOT MATCH UP WITH PRINT EDITION!)TAITC with Steve Medema, on Coase and Transaction CostsDan Klein and Russ Roberts on Theory of Moral SentimentsTibor Scitovsky, 1940, Economica paperGustavo Dudamel’s ‘the wealth of nations’ Melds Opera and Economics - Bloomberg If you have questions or comments, or want to suggest a future topic, email the show at taitc.email@gmail.com ! You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz

    43 Min.

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"The real price of everything is the toil and trouble of acquiring it."  -Adam Smith (WoN, Bk I, Chapter 5) In which the Knower of Important Things shows how transaction costs explain literally everything. Plus TWEJ,  and answers to letters.If YOU have questions, submit them to our email at taitc.email@gmail.com There are two kinds of episodes here: 1. For the most part, episodes June-August are weekly, short (20 mins), and address a few topics. 2. Episodes September-May are longer (1 hour), and monthly, with an interview with a guest.Finally, a quick note:  This podcast is NOT for Stacy Hockett. He wanted you to know that.....

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